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Dive into the research topics where Stephen J. Elvin is active.

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Featured researches published by Stephen J. Elvin.


Infection and Immunity | 2005

Humoral and Cell-Mediated Adaptive Immune Responses Are Required for Protection against Burkholderia pseudomallei Challenge and Bacterial Clearance Postinfection

Gareth D. Healey; Stephen J. Elvin; Margaret Morton; E. Diane Williamson

ABSTRACT Burkholderia pseudomallei, the causative agent of melioidosis, is a gram-negative bacillus endemic to areas of southeast Asia and northern Australia. Presently, there is no licensed vaccine for B. pseudomallei and the organism is refractive to antibiotic therapy. The bacterium is known to survive and multiply inside both phagocytic and nonphagocytic host cells and may be able to spread directly from cell to cell. Current vaccine delivery systems are unlikely to induce the correct immune effectors to stimulate a protective response to the organism. In this study, we have developed a procedure to utilize dendritic cells as a vaccine delivery vector to induce cell-mediated immune responses to B. pseudomallei. Dendritic cells were produced by culturing murine bone marrow progenitor cells in medium containing granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor and tumor necrosis factor alpha. Purified dendritic cells were pulsed with heat-killed whole-cell B. pseudomallei and used to immunize syngeneic mice. Strong cellular immune responses were elicited by this immunization method, although antibody responses were low. Booster immunizations of either a second dose of dendritic cells or heat-killed B. pseudomallei were administered to increase the immune response. Immunized animals were challenged with fully virulent B. pseudomallei, and protection was demonstrated in those with strong humoral and cell-mediated immunity. These results indicate the importance of both cell-mediated and humoral immune mechanisms in protection against intracellular pathogens.


Infection and Immunity | 2006

The ABC Transporter Protein OppA Provides Protection against Experimental Yersinia pestis Infection

Mikio Tanabe; Helen S. Atkins; David N. Harland; Stephen J. Elvin; Anthony J. Stagg; Osman Mirza; Richard W. Titball; Bernadette Byrne; Katherine A. Brown

ABSTRACT The identification of Yersinia pestis as a potential bioterrorism agent and the emergence of antibiotic-resistant strains have highlighted the need for improved vaccines and treatments for plague. The aim of this study was to evaluate the potential for ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporter proteins to be exploited as novel vaccines against plague. Western blotting of ABC transporter proteins using sera from rabbits immunized with killed whole Y. pestis cells or human convalescent-phase sera identified four immunologically reactive proteins: OppA, PstS, YrbD, and PiuA. Mice immunized with these proteins developed antibody to the immunogen. When the immunized mice were challenged with Y. pestis, the OppA-immunized mice showed an increased time to death compared to other groups, and protection appeared to correlate with the level of immunoglobulin G antibody to OppA.


Nature | 2004

Evolutionary genetics: Ambiguous role of CCR5 in Y. pestis infection

Stephen J. Elvin; E. Diane Williamson; Joanne Scott; Jeremy N. Smith; Guillermo Pérez de Lema; Silvia Chilla; Paul R. Clapham; Klaus Pfeffer; Detlef Schlöndorff; Bruno Luckow

Arising from: J. Mecsas et al. 427, 606 (2004)Mecsas and colleagues suggest that a deficiency in the chemokine receptor CCR5 in humans is unlikely to confer protection against plague, based on their study of Yersinia pestis infection in Ccr5-deficient mice. They were testing the hypothesis that a mutation in the CCR5 gene, frequently found in Caucasians, may have been selected for in the past because it provided protection against (bubonic) plague; the mutation, called CCR5Δ32, is characterized by a 32-base-pair deletion. We have also tested this hypothesis by using Y. pestis infection in mice and, in addition, we have done phagocytosis experiments with macrophages from wild-type and Ccr5-deficient mice. Although, like Mecsas et al., we did not see any difference in the survival of the two groups of mice, we did find that there was a significantly reduced uptake of Y. pestis by Ccr5-deficient macrophages in vitro. Our results indicate that the role of Ccr5 in Y. pestis infection may therefore be more complex than previously thought.


Infection and Immunity | 2006

Administration of Antibody to the Lung Protects Mice against Pneumonic Plague

Jim Hill; Jim E. Eyles; Stephen J. Elvin; Gareth D. Healey; Roman A. Lukaszewski; Richard W. Titball

ABSTRACT Intratracheal delivery of aerosolized monoclonal antibodies with specificity for Yersinia pestis LcrV and F1 antigens protected mice in a model of pneumonic plague. These data support the utility of inhaled antibodies as a fast-acting postexposure treatment for plague.


Infection and Immunity | 2006

Protection against Heterologous Burkholderia pseudomallei Strains by Dendritic Cell Immunization

Stephen J. Elvin; Gareth D. Healey; Angie Westwood; Stella C. Knight; James Edward Eyles; E. Diane Williamson

ABSTRACT Burkholderia pseudomallei, the causative agent of melioidosis, is a gram-negative bacterium which can cause either chronic infections or acute lethal sepsis in infected individuals. The disease is endemic in Southeast Asia and northern Australia, but little is known about the mechanisms of protective immunity to the bacterium. In this study, we have developed a procedure to utilize dendritic cells in combination with CpG oligodeoxynucleotides as a vaccine delivery vector to induce protective immune responses to various strains of B. pseudomallei. Our results show that strong cell-mediated immune responses were generated, while antibody responses, although low, were detectable. Upon virulent challenge with B. pseudomallei strain K96243, NCTC 4845, or 576, animals immunized with dendritic cells that were pulsed with heat-killed K96243 and matured in the presence of CpG 1826 showed significant levels of protection. These results show that a vaccine strategy that actively targets dendritic cells can evoke protective immune responses.


Microbial Pathogenesis | 2004

Stat 4 but not Stat 6 mediated immune mechanisms are essential in protection against plague.

Stephen J. Elvin; E. Diane Williamson


Vaccine | 2006

Immunological responses after immunisation of mice with microparticles containing antigen and single stranded RNA (polyuridylic acid).

Angie Westwood; Stephen J. Elvin; Gareth D. Healey; E. Diane Williamson; Jim E. Eyles


Journal of Immunoassay | 1999

The optimisation of a murine TNF-alpha ELISA and the application of the method to other murine cytokines.

Amanda Marie Yates; Stephen J. Elvin; Diane Williamson


Vaccine | 2004

Immunisation against plague by transcutaneous and intradermal application of subunit antigens

Jim E. Eyles; Stephen J. Elvin; Angie Westwood; C.S. LeButt; H.O. Alpar; Satyanarayna Somavarapu; Ethel Diane Williamson


Vaccine | 2006

Protection against bubonic and pneumonic plague with a single dose microencapsulated sub-unit vaccine

Stephen J. Elvin; James Edward Eyles; Kenneth A. Howard; Easwaran Ravichandran; Satyanarayan Somavarappu; H. Oya Alpar; E. Diane Williamson

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E. Diane Williamson

Defence Science and Technology Laboratory

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